翻訳と辞書
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・ Freedom in Exile
・ Freedom in Fragments
・ Freedom in the Groove
・ Freedom in the World
・ Freedom in This Village
・ Freedom Is a State of Mind
・ Freedom Is Frightening
・ Freedom Island
・ Freedom isn't free
・ Freedom Jam
・ Freedom Lasso
・ Freedom Leisure
・ Freedom List
・ Freedom Lite SS-11 Skywatch
・ Freedom Lovin' People
Freedom Machines
・ Freedom Medicine
・ Freedom Memorial
・ Freedom Monument
・ Freedom Monument (disambiguation)
・ Freedom Monument (Kaunas)
・ Freedom Monument (Tbilisi)
・ Freedom Monument (Trujillo)
・ Freedom Monument, Bydgoszcz
・ Freedom movement
・ Freedom Movement of Iran
・ Freedom Neruda
・ Freedom Network
・ Freedom Now
・ Freedom of '76


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Freedom Machines : ウィキペディア英語版
Freedom Machines

''Freedom Machines'' is a 2004 PBS/P.O.V. documentary that looks at disability in the age of technology, presenting intimate stories of people ages 8–93, whose talents and independence are being unleashed by access to modern, enabling technologies. Nearly twenty years after the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, the film reflects on the gaps between its promise and the realities for our largest minority group – 54,000,000 Americans with disabilities. Whether mainstream tools or inventions such as a stair climbing wheelchair (iBOT), ''Freedom Machines'' examines the power of technology to change lives.
==Film content==
''Freedom Machines'' a public television program and national outreach campaign, looks at our beliefs about disability through the lens of assistive technology. The program
explores how human experience and technological innovations are outpacing social policies and the perceptions that have guided them.
In ''Freedom Machines'', viewers will meet a cross-section of America's population a few of the 54 million Americans with disabilities whose lives are being transformed with the help of new technologies. Despite its promise, statistics indicate that fewer than 25% of people with disabilities who could be helped by assistive technology are using it. A 1999 study commissioned by The California Endowment and conducted by the (Alliance for Technology Access ) found that people with disabilities "make do" without vital technology because they are not aware that it is available to them and don't know how to obtain it. Furthermore, the people they most often turn to for information and referrals medical care providers, educators, and community technology centers have inadequate or outdated knowledge themselves. The hardest hit are the poor, those who speak English as a second language, minorities, and the rural poor.
What makes this situation unusual is the existence of tangible solutions and the possibility that they can be widely applied. ''Freedom Machines'' weaves together the stories of a group of people in a dozen locations around the United States. It shows what is now possible, what will soon be possible, and why those who could and should benefit are not doing so.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Freedom Machines」の詳細全文を読む



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